Residue-dependent thermodynamic cost and barrel plasticity balances activity in the PhoPQ-activated enzyme PagP of Salmonella Typhimurium

Iyer, Bharat Ramasubramanian ; Mahalakshmi, Radhakrishnan (2015) Residue-dependent thermodynamic cost and barrel plasticity balances activity in the PhoPQ-activated enzyme PagP of Salmonella Typhimurium Biochemistry, 54 (37). pp. 5712-5722. ISSN 0006-2960

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00543

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00543

Abstract

PagP is an eight-stranded transmembrane β-barrel enzyme indispensable for lipid A palmitoylation in Gram-negative bacteria. The severity of infection by pathogens, including Salmonella, Legionella, and Bordetella, and resistance to antimicrobial peptides, relies on lipid A remodeling by PagP, rendering PagP a sought-after drug target. Despite a conserved sequence, more robust palmitoylation of lipid A is observed in Salmonella typhimurium compared to Escherichia coli, a possible consequence of the differential regulation of PagP expression and/or specific activity. Work here identifies molecular signatures that demarcate thermodynamic stability and variances in catalytic efficiency between S. typhimurium (PagP-St) and E. coli (PagP-Ec) transmembrane PagP barrel variants. We demonstrate that Salmonella PagP displays a 2-fold destabilization of the barrel, while achieving 15–20 magnitude higher lipase efficiency, through subtle alterations of lipid-facing residues distal from the active site. We find that catalytic properties of these homologues are retained across different lipid environments such as micelles, vesicles, and natural extracts. By comparing thermodynamic stability with activity of selectively designed mutants, we conclude that activity–stability trade-offs can be influenced by factors secluded from the catalytic region. Our results provide a compelling correlation of the primary protein structure with enzymatic activity, barrel thermodynamic stability, and scaffold plasticity. Our analysis can open avenues for the development of potent pharmaceuticals against salmonellosis.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Chemical Society.
ID Code:136830
Deposited On:20 Aug 2025 11:26
Last Modified:20 Aug 2025 11:26

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